133 Wis. 215 | Wis. | 1907
The plaintiff in error (hereinafter called the defendant) was indicted and convicted of offering a bribe January 8, 1901, to one Edward F. Strauss, a member of the county board of Milwaukee county, to influence his official actions on a proposition before such board to sell a parcel of real estate on which the county morgue and poor ■office were then situated to the Milwaukee Electric Nailway & Light Company, and he prosecutes his writ of error to reverse the judgment. The errors claimed will be taken up in their order.
“Testimony was received on behalf of the state as to-bribes claimed by it to have been offered by the defendant and one Klefisch at or about the same time to Otto Seidel' and August Puls, who were also members of the county board, to influence them in their vote or action upon the-same measure. The evidence was received solely for the-purpose of aiding you in determining the guilt or innocénce-of the defendant of the crime charged in the indictment in this case, it being claimed by the state that the crime charged against the defendant in this case was only an integral part, of a plan or .scheme participated in by the defendant to corrupt sufficient members of the county board to insure the-passage of the resolution providing for the sale of the county-morgue site to the Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Company for $40,000. It is for you, gentlemen, to say whether or not this testimony tends to-, or does, support the-claim of the state, and you will consider it only for the purpose of determining the guilt or innocence of the defendant of the crime charged in the indictment in this case.”
Another exception relating to the charge may very properly be considered here. The defendant asked that the following instruction be given to the jury, but it was refused :
“The law presumes every man innocent, and desires no conviction if the jury, or any one of them, entertains a reasonable doubt of his guilt; for while the jury, or any one of them, entertains a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the defendant of the crime charged, he cannot, without a great violence to his conscience and sense of right, agree upon a verdict of conviction.”
This instruction was evidently based on the case of Franklin v. State, 92 Wis. 269, 66 N. W. 107, where its refusal was held error. The ground of the ruling as explained in Emery v. State, 101 Wis. 627, 78 N. W. 145, was, however, the fact that the court nowhere gave any instruction on the subject of the presumption of innocence. In the present case the court gave full and accurate instructions on the question of the presumption of innocence, and hence there was no error in refusing the requested instruction.
“The impression he always made on me, and from what I could hear from everybody, [was] that he appeared to be the chairman of all the corruptness that there was in the city of Milwaukee in regard to boodling and grafting.”
A motion to strike out the answer as not responsive was made, and the court remarked that so far as the answer was based on the witness’s own impressions it was perhaps not responsive, but the answer might stand. The general rules
This is a question which has not been specifically treated •in any well-considered case which has come to our attention.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and action remanded for a new trial. The superintendent of the Milwaukee house of correction will surrender the plaintiff in error to the custody of the sheriff of Milwaukee county, who will hold him in custody until he shall he discharged therefrom hy due process of law.